Figatoni

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Exclusive to: Don't Starve Together icon.png

Wendy Portrait.png
The fig cowers in its pasta shell.

Wendy

Figatoni is a Vegetable Food item exclusive to Don't Starve Together and introduced in the Waterlogged update. It is made with combining a fig with 2.0 points of vegetables. The recipe is lenient with inedible fillers and high in priority, only excluding the meat items. Adding any meat item will usually result in Meatballs or can rarely turn into Fish Tacos, Fig-Stuffed Trunk, Froggle Bunwich, Stuffed Eggplant or Stuffed Pepper Poppers depending on the combination of Meats and Vegetables used.

It has a notably high hunger value for a vegetarian dish, being the third most filling one, only passed by Dragonpie and Milkmade Hat. It also provides above-average healing and decent sanity, making it a rather balanced dish. Figs needed to cook it can be found ready to pick in the Waterlogged biome on sea, or be homegrown using Knobby Tree Nuts and Tree Jams. It is possible to make the dish with ingredients purely found at sea, combining figs and Popperfish/Corn Cod.

As a vegetarian dish, it cannot be eaten by Wigfrid, but all other survivors will enjoy it, with Wurt gaining an extra 33% hunger benefit from it, gaining 75 Hunger.

Prerequisites

  • Requires: Figs.png
  • Requires: Crock Pot Vegetables (no Mandrake).png
  • Excludes: Meats Crock Pot.png

Cookbook.png Recipe

Figs.png
Vegetables.png

×2.0

Filler.png
Crock Pot.png
Figatoni.png
Fillers cannot be Meats

Examples

Figs.png
Carrots.png
Carrots.png
Twigs.png
Crock Pot.png
Figatoni.png
Figs.png
Popperfish.png
Kelp Fronds.png
Kelp Fronds.png
Crock Pot.png
Figatoni.png

Trivia

  • Following Barnacle Linguine, this is the second pasta based crock pot dish in the main game.
    • Given that both dishes require 2.0 vegetable value, it's reasonable to assume that the starch of two vegetable crops are used in deriving the starch for making the Wheat Dough.
  • Warly's examination quote could either be positive or negative, as decadent in this context could mean to signify either its rich/strong taste, the use of a fig, a luxorious food item or an abandoning of morals, due to varying definitions of "decadent".
  • Walter's examination quote and his negative view on figs reference to the tactic sometimes utilised by caretakers to make children eat the healthy food they are picky about by hiding them in other dishes.
  • It's name is a portmanteau of Fig and Rigatoni, the latter being a type of Italian pasta with large straight pipe shape, often describe as a bigger, straight-cut version of penne. The dish itself is based on rigatoni pasta and fig sauce, a sweet and savoury sauce occasionally used with meats but can also be used on different types of pastas.